rickcick
Guest
Yes, casting ovens. . .
exact, more and more often there are occasions of return without having to buy everything.:finger:for inventor maintenance costs less (1200 a year against 1500 swx) but swx includes direct support of a retailer, inventor would require it separately.
with swx you can suspend maintenance for 10 years and return with 500 euros extra, with inventor spent 3 versions you have to buy it again.
proe costs more than the other 2 (1920 for the found. if I don't remember bad) and politics is similar to that of autodesk, you should always stay in assince or when you return you pay for the time you stayed out. in reality both for autodesk and for ptc there are often promos to "reent".
then it would be necessary to extend the speech, not only to the cad side and here aim, ne swx,ne inventor are up to.Yes, casting ovens. . .
Well what it is, but of pro/e (creo parametric) and of what else, the father of all the parametric cads:Well, don't leave me like that. Tell me what this is about. :
Surely (knowing ozzy) it is not only a question of proposing a cad, but of "treat" altogether the management of information (geometric and not) of the project.Well, don't leave me like that. Tell me what this is about. :
thank you matteo too kind!Surely (knowing ozzy) it is not only a question of proposing a cad, but of "treat" altogether the management of information (geometric and not) of the project.
If you have a little time (15ggs are not very few) I suggest you pay attention to ozzy: its demo is worth a course:finger:
a melting oven is definitely a set of thousands of components. So be careful about this, because you might find yourself struggling with management when the aid starts to become impressive.Well, don't leave me like that. Tell me what this is about. :
This is certainly true. but which cad allows you to model huge and very complex assemblies without simplifying them? At one point everyone "stands" and has to resort to "subterfuges" of modeling.a melting oven is definitely a set of thousands of components. So be careful about this, because you might find yourself struggling with management when the aid starts to become impressive.
Although I don't know any of 2 as use, I'm also willing to suggest solidworks, perhaps because it's more mature than inventor, born as 3d long before the latter.But nobody breaks a spear for inventor? to what I have drawn from the various posts, all tendentially indicate me sw... why, probably why inventor is not so known?
here is the same speech I made yesterday with on the thread of the pdm... Unfortunately there are still companies that go ahead with drawings made on the tecnigraph or worse still hand on cheese paper without codes or other. you who use acad lt are already more fortunate, but long go if you do not have the appropriate tools will be very difficult to be competitive with competition when you will have to remake a new project starting from an existing one in a short time. Obviously it's not your fault and you're already doing a lot to improve.However thank you for the advice you give me, consider that to get a 3d in the company I am making mortal jumps, many believe that there is no need for a 3d, since from now on you can very well go ahead with autocad lt...
creo parametric costs 6390 euro a list and the hardware is the same as you would buy with inv or swx.We don't do all those studies... we are a small company that has been going on for 50 years... Consider that 4 years ago, when I was hired, they still used lt'95... I had to insist on updating him... It's only recently that, having found me in the design of a complex machine, a set of different mechanical details, I noticed the time it took every time to change an organ that interacted with others and that having had a 3d parametric, all this would have been done in less time... and not only, for sw or inventor you also have to buy efficient workstations... this means that postage spending will be around 10000euro... So if I were wrong and the 3d after you don't use it as you should, I would see my head rolling down the slope...
That's why I have to stay with my feet on the ground looking for a 3d that costs the right, that is parametric, that has modules for the carpentry, the sheet, that gives me the possibility to build aces, that it goes well for the mechanics, that you can make films, that you can extrapolate pictures of the details, that it is commercial and not niche... I mean...
all cad well or bad export to dwg/dxfWell, I don't know absolutely create parametric... I see if I can contact a supplier in my area...
stupid question: all these 3d then create a .dwg, right?
I make a reasoning from service provider (structural calculation), having among my clients many that are in the same situation. Clearly I address you, but these are topics that you should bring to your leaders:This means that postage spending will be around 10000euro. . .
If I hadn't understood it yet as well as member of this forum I am a dealer of creo parametric.Well, I don't know absolutely create parametric... I see if I can contact a supplier in my area...
stupid question: all these 3d then create a .dwg, right?
reading this post is how to relive the 'my' history of the passage from 2d to 3d!We don't do all those studies... we are a small company that has been going on for 50 years... Consider that 4 years ago, when I was hired, they still used lt'95... I had to insist on updating him... It's only recently that, having found me in the design of a complex machine, a set of different mechanical details, I noticed the time it took every time to change an organ that interacted with others and that having had a 3d parametric, all this would have been done in less time... and not only, for sw or inventor you also have to buy efficient workstations... this means that postage spending will be around 10000euro... So if I were wrong and the 3d after you don't use it as you should, I would see my head rolling down the slope...
That's why I have to stay with my feet on the ground looking for a 3d that costs the right, that is parametric, that has modules for the carpentry, the sheet, that gives me the possibility to build aces, that it goes well for the mechanics, that you can make films, that you can extrapolate pictures of the details, that it is commercial and not niche... I mean...